I went from GUI to terminal and I’ll never go back. Especially with interactive add, git add -i
I went from GUI to terminal and I’ll never go back. Especially with interactive add, git add -i
Portable monitors have been extremely convenient when I used to travel to a client site to program. A cheap one is worth getting.
Debian is 30 years old for a reason.
That’s really freaking cool! Thanks for sharing! What was the work effort for this amount of progress? I’d like to do this with my next house.
Do you mind sharing pictures of what this looks like?
What on earth is that picture?
This reminds me of Mario an Essay: https://youtu.be/1ZUhJsf1yUo?si=lXgmGMOqUjHxv7sK
Debian is more stable than Windows or Mac. It’s 30 years old for a reason.
Lemmy scratches the itch that reddit filled and I’m on my phone less. I left before the blackout and I won’t be back.
Cotton Eye Joe
Wait what
This is the answer.
I liked Ubuntu prior to snap. I’ve gone back to Debian and aside from a slightly complex install, I think that the distro is the epitome of stability and “just works”, especially for the normal software stuff I do. It’s 30 years old for a reason.
My experiences with arch are that it just broke if you looked at it funny and I like stuff that doesn’t require the constant tinkering. This is the same reason I don’t do smart tech and still own dumb and mechanical watches.
I feel like I’m in the minority in this community lately.
Just use Debian tbh
Camunda BPM is pretty bad.
Understand programmatic approaches to testing, unit testing, test driven development (TDD), behavioral driven development (BDD), and integration tests.
Understanding TDD and practicing it as a new developer forces you to understand the end result wholly. It’s one thing to understand how to solve a problem, but understanding how to validate that the problem is solved programmatically, before you have implemented the solution makes you a better developer. It gives you a better view of what you are doing and will change you way of thinking about solving problems.
Try it out. It is a great utility.